Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Business
  4. Emerging Tech
  5. Mobile
  6. News

Elliptic Labs wants to replace the proximity sensor on your phone with ultrasound

Add as a preferred source on Google

Elliptic Labs made a bit of a splash a few years ago when it unveiled its gesture-control technology for smartphones. The intriguing tech works through a modified chip that tunes the devices’ speakers to emit ultrasound waves. The company has now unveiled Beauty — a new ultrasound proximity software, and it’s working with OEMs to integrate its tech into devices and remove the need for optical proximity sensors.

Optical proximity sensors can be found in most smartphones and they perform a number of functions. For example, the sensors turn off the screen when you’re taking a call, so that your cheek doesn’t trigger any actions. The sensors can disrupt the aesthetic of the device, though, as they are typically placed by the front-facing camera on the top of your phone. Elliptic Labs’ solution removes the need for those sensors, saving some money, and space inside the device and out.

Recommended Videos

The waves are emitted through the speakers and bounce off your hands. They are then picked up by the microphone, which translates the distance and hand movements as certain gestures. So like the optical sensor, the tech can still determine when you pick up the phone and look at it, and when you put it up to your ear to take a call.

The benefit of Elliptic’s method is that it doesn’t require any additional hardware, and could potentially incorporate a multitude of other gestures into interactions with the phone. The company says there is no difference in quality compared to using an actual optical proximity sensor, and in fact, the device can deliver a greater detection range with ultrasound. The greater range increases the number of potential actions the device can interpret, while offering a more “aesthetically pleasing design” by getting rid of the black circles on the front of your smartphone.

We saw the tech in action at Mobile World Congress last year, and were impressed by the number of different motions ultrasound could detect from as far away as 4 feet. We snapped selfies, navigated through menus, checked notifications, and even played a game — all without ever touching the device.

We don’t know exactly which OEMs the company is working with and when, but Elliptic Labs announced that it is working to integrate its new Beauty ultrasound proximity software into smartphones this year.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Mobile and Wearables Editor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
Apple users are being targeted by a familiar tech support scam
Apple users face a new wave of fake iPhone and iCloud security warnings
iPhone user

AI has made online scams harder to spot by making deepfakes, voice cloning, and fake messages more realistic. Even so, the old tech support scam is still catching victims. For years, fraudsters often posed as Microsoft support workers. Now, reports suggest many are shifting their attention to Apple users.

Consumers are reporting a rise in fake “Apple High Alert” messages that claim an iPhone, iCloud account, or Apple ID has been compromised. These messages are designed to make people panic and react quickly before they can stop to check whether the warning is real.

Read more
iOS 27 puts a much better dictation experience on your iPhone, and you must enable it
A better dictation system is already on your iPhone. Apple just didn't switch it on.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

If you have an iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max, or iPhone Air running iOS 27 beta, you have a meaningfully better dictation system on your device right now. 

However, Apple did not turn it on by default, and most users have no idea it is there.

Read more
I’ve tried nearly every iOS 27 feature, and these 3 are why I’m still excited about the update
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

It's been a little over a week since Apple's WWDC keynote, and the iOS 27 beta is already out in the wild. While Apple spent plenty of time talking about its Gemini-powered Siri, the thing I was most excited about was getting the update onto my iPhone 16e and seeing what it was actually like to live with.

I've been using the beta every day since then, and one thing has become pretty clear: not every new feature lived up to the hype for me. Some felt more interesting during the announcement than they do in everyday use, while others simply haven't found a place in my routine. But a few features have been the complete opposite. They're the ones I've found myself returning to again and again without even thinking about it. After spending more than a week with iOS 27, these are the three features that have stood out the most — and the biggest reason I'm still excited about this update.

Read more